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around the traps

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Pronunciation

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Prepositional phrase

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around the traps

  1. (Australia, colloquial) here and there; in various places.
    • 2004, Paul Matthew St Pierre, A Portrait of the Artist as Australian: L'Oeuvre bizarre de Barry Humphries:
      While debating whether Sydney is a “Pooftah's Paradise,” Les is careful to protest (and obviously a bit too much) his distance from gay men and sexual practice: “Well, all I can say is that I've knocked around the traps and I've lived in Australia man and boy for donkey's years, and in all that time nobody's every[sic] tried to slip their pollywaffle up my doughnut.”
    • 2017, David Owen, Romeo's Gun:
      I use two fingers to hand the photo to him through the bars of his gate, say, 'You may have heard around the traps that he's missing, Mister Nero, and although he lives in Hobart he's got many Melbourne connections. Know him?'